Retirement Chainsaw Gift Assistance

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

heathsexton

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Oct 12, 2019
Messages
8
Reaction score
10
Location
Shongaloo
My Dad 67 will be retiring in July of 2020 (34yrs with the local Sheriff’s Office) he has always worked 2-3 jobs to provide for our family even worked as a logger during the day and patrol @ night and I’m very proud of him and all his accomplishments he has made and also for the man he made out of me, that being said the man can run a saw no doubt, but his Stihl 044 is a little much for his ‘ole joints’ as he says but he continues to use it but I can tell every time the next day when he has used it from his shoulder hurting from starting and that saw has mean compression to bending over and his lower back hurting with the 18” regular bar when I told him I would get him a light weight but that’s partly my fault for not getting it yet, all this being said I’m looking to get him a new saw but would like to keep close to the same specs (power, torque) but wanted to ask everyone’s opinion what to get a smaller lighter saw, with light weight bar and what could I do to “hop it up” so he wouldn’t feel as if its an inferior saw please all suggestions are great also one thing I was going to do is put a full grip “rescue saw handle” to help when the grip and ease is cranking but please feel free to comment thank you all in advance
H. Sexton
 
My Dad 67 will be retiring in July of 2020 (34yrs with the local Sheriff’s Office) he has always worked 2-3 jobs to provide for our family even worked as a logger during the day and patrol @ night and I’m very proud of him and all his accomplishments he has made and also for the man he made out of me, that being said the man can run a saw no doubt, but his Stihl 044 is a little much for his ‘ole joints’ as he says but he continues to use it but I can tell every time the next day when he has used it from his shoulder hurting from starting and that saw has mean compression to bending over and his lower back hurting with the 18” regular bar when I told him I would get him a light weight but that’s partly my fault for not getting it yet, all this being said I’m looking to get him a new saw but would like to keep close to the same specs (power, torque) but wanted to ask everyone’s opinion what to get a smaller lighter saw, with light weight bar and what could I do to “hop it up” so he wouldn’t feel as if its an inferior saw please all suggestions are great also one thing I was going to do is put a full grip “rescue saw handle” to help when the grip and ease is cranking but please feel free to comment thank you all in advance
H. Sexton
Welcome to the site.
I'm a husky man
But the consensus of everyone i know
That has run and has experience with the Stihl 462 it's a fine light strong modern saw.
I believe it's a couple pounds lighter than a 044
@huskihl
What's your input?
 
I agree the 462 sounds about perfect for him. Light and powerful and the latest innovations in chainsaws. The ms500i would be even better, but who knows when that will be available.
 
Get him something in the 55-65cc range and send it off to someone who does custom saw work. Have them port and it and build it exactly how you want it for him. Things I like doing for customers aside from just porting is custom grips, custom polishing, dying plastics, custom spikes and so on. Fun to add a little flair to saws. I’m currently doing a 044 for a local and he was willing to pay for some cool add-ons. Should be a powerful cool looking saw when it’s done.

How big of wood does he need to be able to cut? Some of the smaller saws 50cc ish after porting make really good power.
 
My Dad 67 will be retiring in July of 2020 (34yrs with the local Sheriff’s Office) he has always worked 2-3 jobs to provide for our family even worked as a logger during the day and patrol @ night and I’m very proud of him and all his accomplishments he has made and also for the man he made out of me, that being said the man can run a saw no doubt, but his Stihl 044 is a little much for his ‘ole joints’ as he says but he continues to use it but I can tell every time the next day when he has used it from his shoulder hurting from starting and that saw has mean compression to bending over and his lower back hurting with the 18” regular bar when I told him I would get him a light weight but that’s partly my fault for not getting it yet, all this being said I’m looking to get him a new saw but would like to keep close to the same specs (power, torque) but wanted to ask everyone’s opinion what to get a smaller lighter saw, with light weight bar and what could I do to “hop it up” so he wouldn’t feel as if its an inferior saw please all suggestions are great also one thing I was going to do is put a full grip “rescue saw handle” to help when the grip and ease is cranking but please feel free to comment thank you all in advance
H. Sexton
Imho those d ring pull handles suck for daily use.
I tried them in the woods
The decomps work just fine.
 
Get him something in the 55-65cc range and send it off to someone who does custom saw work. Have them port and it and build it exactly how you want it for him. Things I like doing for customers aside from just porting is custom grips, custom polishing, dying plastics, custom spikes and so on. Fun to add a little flair to saws. I’m currently doing a 044 for a local and he was willing to pay for some cool add-ons. Should be a powerful cool looking saw when it’s done.

How big of wood does he need to be able to cut? Some of the smaller saws 50cc ish after porting make really good power.

Average loblolly pine here is 18-28’ and we’ve got some monster oaks and gum but he will probably stay around the 18-20 range if he needs anything bigger he can come get my 42’ 660
 
I have a random question I’ve got some what people say and have brought me “junk saws” I would like to attempt a muffler mod what material is used to make the exhaust and how is it welded or brazed
 
Get him something in the 55-65cc range and send it off to someone who does custom saw work. Have them port and it and build it exactly how you want it for him. Things I like doing for customers aside from just porting is custom grips, custom polishing, dying plastics, custom spikes and so on. Fun to add a little flair to saws. I’m currently doing a 044 for a local and he was willing to pay for some cool add-ons. Should be a powerful cool looking saw when it’s done.

How big of wood does he need to be able to cut? Some of the smaller saws 50cc ish after porting make really good power.

i would like to see some of your work
 
Back
Top